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Econ 400, sets and logic
A. SETS: introduction/review
1. Definition: any collection of distinct elements
a) defined by...
i) enumeration of elements:
S={2,4,6,8}
ii) description of elements:
S={x | x is a positive even integer greater than zero
and less than 10}
b) how large/ how many elements?
i) finite # of elements: set is ''denumerable''
or ''countable''
ex: set S above
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Econ 400, sets and logic
ii) infinite # of elements: set may be either
denumberable or nondenumerable
- depends on order of infinity ( cardinality)
ex: set of all natural numbers (counting numbers)
is smallest infinite set
- can elements of the set be matched to
the natural numbers?
ex: set of real numbers - larger than set of
naturals - is nondenumberable
c) null or ''empty'' set: set containing no elements
- ex: A={x | x
- denoted by
2
=0 and x > 1}

or { }
- not to be confused with { 0 }
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Econ 400, sets and logic
2. Set notation:
Let A={a,c,d}
i) elements
a  A: a is an element of set A
b
A: b is not an element of A
ii) subsets: set S is a subset of A if every element
of S is also an element of A.
{a,c}
A
A : {a,c} is a subset of A
{a,c} : A contains this subset
3. Relations: equal sets, complements
4. Set algebra: given sets A ={1,2,3}, B={4,5,6},
and C={1,2,3,4,5,6}
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Econ 400, sets and logic
i) union: A
B=C
ii) intersection: A
B=
iii) subtraction: C-B, or C\B, =A
iv) multiplication: ordered pairs
AxB={(a,b)|a
A, b
B}
- Cartesian plane
- commodity bundles
5. Set of real numbers:
properties: (pp 26-30 in Hoy et al, 2nd edn.)
lub, glb
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Econ 400, sets and logic
II. Logic and Proofs:
(This borrows extensively from the webpage
"Introduction to Logic" at
http://people.hofstra.edu/faculty/Stefan_Waner/RealWorld/logic/logicintro.html
)
i) proposition or statement:
def'n: any declarative sentence which is either true
(T) or false (F).
- declarative? nondeclarative?
The floor is dirty
Please hand in your exams now.
- all nondeclarative statements are irrelevant
(in logic) - think computer programming,
and comments
- the "truth value" of a statement is either T or F
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Econ 400, sets and logic
ii) operations on statements:
Let P and Q be two statements.
Def'n: Compound statement: at least one statement,
and one logical operator
a) negation:  P is "not P"
- defined by: opposite truth value
Ex: P = "there is life on Jupiter"
i
P = "there is no life on Jupiter"
Ex: P= "it is raining"
i
P = "it is not raining"
Ex: P = "all whales are mammals"
i
P = "some whales are not mammals"
(NOT: "no whales are mammals")
b) conjunction:
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Econ 400, sets and logic
The conjunction of p and q is the statement p
T
q,
which we read "p and q."
Truth value:
p q p
T
T T
T
T F
F
F T
F
F F
F
q
c) disjunction:
The disjunction of p and q is the statement p
U
q,
which we read "p or q."
Truth value:
p q p
U
T T
T
T F
T
F T
T
F F
F
q
Note: the inclusive "or"
Now: from any two statements, each of which has
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Econ 400, sets and logic
one of two truth values, can infer the truth value of all
possible compound sentences.
Notice (in table): some expressions always have
the same truth value, for all possible truth values of
the variables involved; these statements are
equivalent. This is the basis of different types of
proofs.
DeMorgan's Laws: if P and Q are statements, then
(P  Q)  P Q
(P  Q)  P Q
Tautology: compound statement that is always
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Econ 400, sets and logic
true, regardless of the truth value of its
component statements.
Contradiction: compound statement that is always
false, regardless of the truth value of its
component statements
Distributive Laws:
P  (Q  R)  (P  Q)  (P  R)
P  (Q  R)  (P  Q)  (P  R)
iii) arguments:
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Econ 400, sets and logic
def'n: collection of ≥ 2 statements, one designated
as inferable from the others.
- premises
- conclusion.
Ex: There is water on Jupiter
If there is water on Jupiter, then there is life on
Jupiter.
There is life on Jupiter.
Statements can be true or false
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Econ 400, sets and logic
Arguments can be valid or invalid
- do premises logically imply conclusion?
- independent of truth value of premises asking if conjunction of premises implies
conclusion
- since validity of argument depends only on
inference rules, can check validity substituting
symbols for words.
Consider the following:
If Jones was convicted of leaving the scene of an
accident or driving while intoxicated, then his
license was revoked.
If his license was revoked, his insurance policy was
cancelled.
His insurance policy was not cancelled.
Jones was not convicted of leaving the scene of an
accident.
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Econ 400, sets and logic
Breaking this down into statements….
Logical analysis….
Examples: Are premises true or false? Is argument
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Econ 400, sets and logic
valid? Is conclusion true?
1. All whales are mammals
All mammals have lungs
All whales have lungs.
2. All whales are reptiles
All reptiles have lungs
All whales have lungs.
3. All whales are reptiles
All reptiles have blue hair
All whales have blue hair.
4. All whales are mammals
All fish have mouths.
All whales have mouths.
True premises, valid argument →true conclusion
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Econ 400, sets and logic
If reject conclusion (demonstrably false, don't
believe it), then either argument is invalid
or premises are false.
iv) Necessary and sufficient conditions:
necessary: P is necessary for Q if P must have
occurred for Q to have occurred
- observation of Q implies that P has
occurred, even if unobserved
- Q→P
(Q implies P; if Q, then P; P if Q)
Ex: A={x | x is an integer less than 10}
B={x | x is an integer less than 8}
B → A; also:  A →  B (contrapositive)
A → B?
sufficient: P is sufficient for Q if whenever P is
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Econ 400, sets and logic
true, Q must also be true
- observation of P implies Q has occurred
- P→Q
(P implies Q; if P, then Q;
P only if Q)
necessary and sufficient: P↔ Q
- statements P and Q are equivalent
- P if and only if Q; P iff Q
- Ex: A={x | x2 1}
B={1,1}
v) Common types of proof:
a) direct
b) indirect
a) Direct proof?
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Econ 400, sets and logic
- proof by construction
- brute force
- deductive reasoning
b) Indirect proof?
- proof by contradiction: to "prove"
assume
- since
A B
B,
true iff
A B ,
show this implies
B  A,
A
this proves original
assertion.
Indirect proof frequently shorter, less
illuminating/intuitive
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